Search Results - "Buckeridge, John S"
-
1
Principles for creating a single authoritative list of the world’s species
Published in PLoS biology (07-07-2020)“…Lists of species underpin many fields of human endeavour, but there are currently no universally accepted principles for deciding which biological species…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
2
Vulcanolepas scotiaensis sp. nov., a new deep-sea scalpelliform barnacle (Eolepadidae: Neolepadinae) from hydrothermal vents in the Scotia Sea, Antarctica
Published in Zootaxa (09-12-2013)“…A new deep-sea stalked barnacle, Vulcanolepas scotiaensis sp. nov. is described from hydrothermal vents at depths of 2400-2600 metres along segments of the…”
Get more information
Journal Article -
3
Phylogenetic position of Antarctic Scalpelliformes (Crustacea: Cirripedia: Thoracica)
Published in Deep-sea research. Part I, Oceanographic research papers (01-03-2013)“…The phylogenetic relationships of seven Antarctic barnacle species, one verrucomorph and six scalpelliforms from the Scotia, Weddell and Ross seas were…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
4
Paleogene Verrucidae (Cirripedia: Verrucomorpha) of North America, with descriptions of three new species
Published in Zootaxa (18-12-2019)“…In North America, Paleogene Verrucidae are rarely encountered. Only a single named species has been previously discussed by Zullo Baum (1979), who…”
Get more information
Journal Article -
5
Widespread support for a global species list with a formal governance system
Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS (07-11-2023)“…Taxonomic data are a scientific common. Unlike nomenclature, which has strong governance institutions, there are currently no generally accepted governance…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
6
Integrative Zoology: 2006-2016 - A decade of substantial achievement
Published in Integrative zoology (01-11-2016)Get full text
Journal Article -
7
Towards a global list of accepted species III. Independence and stakeholder inclusion
Published in Organisms diversity & evolution (01-12-2021)“…A global consensus list of the world’s species must be based on the best available taxonomic research, and its contents should not be biased towards certain…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
8
Towards a global list of accepted species IV: Overcoming fragmentation in the governance of taxonomic lists
Published in Organisms diversity & evolution (01-12-2021)“…Governance is the act of governing or organizing, that is a system of rules, norms, or shared strategies to guide or regulate the actions of the governed…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
9
Depositional environment of the early Pleistocene Castlepoint Formation, New Zealand: a canyon fill in situ
Published in New Zealand journal of geology and geophysics (02-10-2018)“…The early Pleistocene (early Nukumaruan) Castlepoint Formation cropping out on the Wairarapa coast contains a diverse molluscan, bryozoan and barnacle…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
10
Taphonomy and systematics of a new Late Cretaceous verrucid barnacle (Cirripedia, Thoracica) from Canterbury, New Zealand
Published in Palaeontology (01-03-2011)“…: Cirripede remains (Thoracica, Verrucomorpha), found associated with the mosasaur Prognathodon waiparaensis Welles and Gregg, 1971 in glauconitic sands of…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
11
-
12
Opportunism and the resilience of barnacles (Cirripedia: Thoracica) to environmental change
Published in Integrative zoology (01-06-2012)“…Cirripede‐like organisms have their origins in the Palaeozoic, but until the Cainozoic, were represented primarily by pedunculated forms, such as the…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
13
The “Tears of the Virgin” at Lakes Entrance, southeast Australia were made by the intertidal barnacle Chthamalus antennatus (Cirripedia: Thoracica) and cyanobacteria
Published in Integrative zoology (01-05-2017)“…Curious eroded depressions, most resembling an eye shedding an elongate tear, are found in gently sloping, intertidal, carbonate‐rich arenite outcropping on…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
14
On ethics, the pursuit of knowledge, truth and status in the hallowed halls of academe
Published in Integrative zoology (01-09-2013)“…Advancement in academe is largely on the basis of research output; that is, refereed journal papers. This paper first explores pressures on academics,…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
15
Some biological consequences of environmental change: A study using barnacles (Cirripedia: Balanomorpha) and gum trees (Angiospermae: Myrtaceae)
Published in Integrative zoology (01-06-2010)“…Uniformitarianism permits understanding of the past on the basis of the present, and modeling the future through consideration of the fossil record. The…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
16
Unravelling the nature of Waiparaconus, a pennatulacean (Cnidaria: Octocorallia) from the Late Mesozoic-Early Cainozoic of the Southern Hemisphere
Published in Integrative zoology (01-03-2014)“…Enigmatic calcareous conical fossils have been known from marine Paleocene–Eocene sequences of New Zealand since the early 1870s. More recently, similar…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
17
The barnacle and the building: a modern morality tale
Published in Integrative zoology (01-06-2008)“…A rare and almost complete barnacle fossil, previously described on the basis of two isolated shell fragments, was recently exposed in a limestone block on the…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
18
Celebrating three years of Integrative Zoology and looking ahead to the XX International Congress of Zoology
Published in Integrative zoology (01-06-2008)Get full text
Journal Article -
19
Some insights into how barnacles survive as sessile organisms
Published in Integrative zoology (01-12-2009)“…During routine chemical analyses of the stalked ibliform barnacle Chaetolepas calcitergum Buckeridge & Newman 2006, peaks of more than 7% (by dry mass) of…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
20
Densely packed concentrations of sessile barnacles (Cirripedia: Sessilia) from the Early Pliocene of SE Spain
Published in Facies (01-05-2008)“…Sessile barnacle assemblages, dominated by Concavus concavus (Bronn) and Balanus perforatus Bruguière, are very abundant in the Lower Pliocene deposits of the…”
Get full text
Journal Article